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16:01
yay number one
How cool should I be to view deleted questions?
I wonder why my question got a -1
about this much: |-------------------------| (image may look different on your monitor, depending on your resolution and aspect ratio)
@khajvah 8,530 imaginary internet more points cool by the looks of it :)
damn
I like that you hate corruption. Is that data, political or something else?
16:10
political initially but data works too :D
Makes minor grammar change. Pull request is full of grammar errors.
@khajvah about this cool:
@davidism Reject - commit message should be "with", not "to". Live by the sword and all that.
16:14
@khajvah hint you'd want to unsee them.
Ok, I choose the blue pill
DSM
DSM
Most deleted questions are just bad in boring ways. I'm not saying there aren't some that are hilarious, but it's like <1% of the total.
DSM
DSM
@AnttiHaapala: where do I know the name Mikko Ohtamaa from? Is he on SO?
yes
he's the one who converted me from perlitude
16:19
@AnttiHaapala Finland! high fives
@BhargavRao torilla tavataan!
where's @Kevin btw
His bot must be down for maintenance and upgrades
@khajvah selected answers from stackoverflow.com/questions/11227809/…
@khajvah "thaks all ............................................"; "sdsf sdf frf rger ergehtrh rh rthrth we", "because the sorted array compiled very efficiently", "i don't unstand what the answer mean"
@khajvah so you'd see this, all the time, in every substantial question
@davidism cv or not :d
I guess not
so need to retract
16:29
It's a duplicate based on the new info
@AnttiHaapala Really? My guess would be that such questions would get about 5 upvotes and then get closed as dups
@khajvah I mean, that question has the most upvoted answer in the entire stackoverflow...
but the bulk of the answers that you do not see are deleted answers...
oh I see
16:31
can't :D
and I stupidly retracted my vote
sorry :">
@davidism no [python] there
fixed
I'm obviously missing somethign regarding abc.abstractmethod, because shouldn't this throw errors?
the question's fine, no need to downvote
class foo:
    @abc.abstractmethod
    def print_foo(self):
        pass

class bar(foo):
    def print_foo(self):
        print 'bar'

class baz(foo):
    def myfunc(self):
        pass


b = bar()
b.print_foo()

# I want this to throw an error
z = baz()
z.print_foo()
I thought the whole point of the abc.abstractmethod was to force classes (baz, in this case) to implement methods in subtyped classes
16:39
Did you set foo's meta?
the above code is my MCVE
so... probably not then
__metaclass__ = abc.ABCMeta in foo
Oh sorry, that's old syntax if you're on 3
I'm using 2.7
class foo:
    _metaclass__ = abc.ABCMeta

    @abc.abstractmethod
    def print_foo(self):
        pass

class bar(foo):
    def print_foo(self):
        print 'bar'

class baz(foo):
    def myfunc(self):
        pass


b = bar()
b.print_foo()

# I want this to throw an error
print 'this should error:'
z = baz()
z.print_foo()
that is still not erroring for me...
DSM
DSM
@enderland: count your underscores.
errrhm, doh
programming, 90% dumb mistakes, 10% impossible problems
16:42
Those are the new perspective-based underscores, inspired by the Windows 10 logo
DSM
DSM
BTW, in Python 2 you should write class foo(object): You can drop the object when you upgrade to modern Python..
Now that he's retiring, DSM can spend his time helping people spot dunder typos and finish his fan fiction novel.
3
@Ffisegydd he should keep his mind sharp and work on Nidaba, surely? :p
DSM
DSM
I'm resigning, not retiring.. but yes, I have given some thought to what I'm going to do with my evenings and weekends. ;-)
@DSM our project is pretty small now, but.... meh. I don't know, everyone here works on 2.7 so... bleh
16:43
@enderland howdy - how goes it?
@JonClements heya!
@DSM Learn more D3.
so another dumb (probably) question, is there any way to mandate that a subtype calls the super __init__ method?
DSM is retiring Python 2?
@enderland out of curiosity - why would you want that?
16:46
@JonClements what I am doing is basically adding a base class that contains some default functionality, and I want to make sure it is getting initialized whenever I create a subtyped object
this might not be the most pythonic way to do this, for the record
and probably isn't if you are asking that question ;-)
@enderland so, did the previous thing work?
@RobertGrant yeah. connecting all the dots on the metaclass worked
Good, glad it was helpful
@enderland And what does this "initialisation" stuff do?
@JonClements currently just sets a private object
not sure in future if anything will be needed or not
16:50
Private?
There ain't no privacy here. This is Python. We're a bunch of peeping toms.
well, yes. :P
So, can you put that in the base's __init__ and assign it to an instance member, then have the other functions assume it's there?
by "private" I mean "private from the API perspective" :)
@JonClements yeah
but that requires me to do super(GoBuilder, self).__init__(name)
in all the subtyped classes
which isn't horrible, I guess, but... my curiosity makes me wonder if I can force that at the level of the base class
You can use black magic to do it - but it's remarkably confusing and no-one would appreciate you doing it for the sake of not typing a simple line :)
ah, wasnt sure if there is a non-black magic way
16:53
@enderland everything works, except that code!
@JRich @DSM @PM2 for your number-theory-pleasure: quantamagazine.org/…
@enderland in Python 3, you'd use class foo(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):, which would throw if you did a typo :D
@AnttiHaapala ?
@AnttiHaapala yeah, I am waffling on going python 3+ or not. I think most stuff here is written in 2.7 but... new. shiny. toys!
new shiny toys.
who was it who just converted last week?
@JGreenwell?
16:58
yes?
yesterday, by JGreenwell
my latest graduate projects are the first time I get to use Python 3 (with IPython too) and I used to wonder why people insisted on switching......now I get it
yep, that was me. Also, yes Python 3 w/IPython is awesome :)
@enderland in today's world, you call something that is almost 8 years old "new and shiny?"
though, technically I started the real programming of this project last month so it was a month ago that I converted (I guess I was just still in the closet until yesterday ;)
@AnttiHaapala is 3.X that old?
now I feel... dated already haa
17:01
@enderland YES
DSM
DSM
3.2 was the first really usable Python 3, IMHO.
I’ve used 3.1 a lot
I've only used 3.2
3.3 for real work
But I also used 3.0
@enderland Python 3.0 is older than windows 7; windows vista really
so you're switching from Windows ME to Windows Vista, shiny new toys
17:07
Need a bit of help in finding the right dupe here stackoverflow.com/questions/35993549/…
The OP has disagreed with an earlier dupe.
@BhargavRao funny just 1 minute ago in C room
I'd like to do this: I want to convert a string in an integer, the string is for example "s123456" and the integer must be 123456
maybe I will petition my small team to go to python 3.X then...
Hah, coincidence much :P
Oh and are there better dupes for that?
@AnttiHaapala: have +15
@inspectorG4dget +14 :/
had to downvote something :D
17:13
awww
thanks
@inspectorG4dget well you should change that the "expected output is []"
because if you do several groups the other groups are []
@enderland He answered my question; I accepted his answer. Therefore he gets +15 rep
oh. hah.
I guess that's the obvious answer. today is hard
yes yes... a lot of us are jetlagged #daylightsavingsisstupid
17:17
I'm not. but I'll go with that excuse
I added Python internals there
I'm already on my third caffeine
@enderland no that is not the obvious answer there
the question there has an answer that is far from obvious.
err, the obvious answer to where the +15 came frome :)
5
Q: Unexpected Behavior of itertools.groupby

inspectorG4dgetThis is the observed behavior: In [4]: x = itertools.groupby(range(10), lambda x: True) In [5]: y = next(x) In [6]: next(x) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- StopIteration Traceback (most recent call last) <ipython-input-6-5...

ah :D
17:18
I wonder why I got -2 on that question, though
hmm actually I think that question could be asked the other way:
@AnttiHaapala actually, I'm not enough of a wizard to expect []. I would have still expected the output to be list(range(10))
the latter one from that link @inspectorG4dget
it is because the itertools.groupby explicitly says that the iterator is shared.
"The returned group is itself an iterator that shares the underlying iterable with groupby(). Because the source is shared, when the groupby() object is advanced, the previous group is no longer visible."
and without knowing that the iterator is shared (which I didn't before I read your answer), it would not make sense to not expect list(range(10))
yes, but that is not the point of the surprise, the point is that after you know that it is shared, why does it return just 1 element and it isn't obvious at first
17:23
for me, they both were
why is json.load so stupid
because it literally has Java in the name
but you cannot do it with json.load. at all
and ther eis no reason for it not to
It might be YAML
a superset of JSON that does allow multiple documents per file
@davidism the problem is that after json.load has scanned until }, there is no way to say do not scan more
but it just does
it would be a very useful addition to have a flag for handling catenated json objects
17:30
It would be nice, but I'm somewhat sure that the JSON spec says one document per file.
doesn't matter
maybe ijson supports that
the point is "without resorting to ijson"
why ijson is needed in the first place, is pretty much this :d
I once got a 2G single json document
not fun
and basically it was just 1 million objects in a list.
without linebreaks of course
17:33
What is the best way to implement multiple chatrooms in flask. Thus, an flask backend that can listen to multiple ports. I can't find any solutions.
@AbhishekBhatia closing as too broad :D
why do you think it needs multiple ports?
@AbhishekBhatia websockets
totally XY problem
17:34
@AnttiHaapala I've been contemplating using ijson in Flask, because it's currently easy to dos any app that accepts json.
see that for example, it connects to an URL, so you can have /rooms/1 at the end of the url
@davidism it is currently easy to dos anything that uses python
@davidism for example if ijson allows you to make a recursive list of more than 1000 items deep, then printing it can sigsegv on python 2
hmm I think the number was higher
Thanks. I have seen that. My use case is a bit different that I don't have any webpages. The frontend is desktop application (wirtten in kivy). Should I launch a separate thread for each port?
17:40
@AbhishekBhatia sockets don't care what the frontend is
I reopened stackoverflow.com/questions/35993614/… now that the OP added an MCVE.
Answer away, my good Python experts!
17:56
man I wish SO and SE chat were unified, this two chat tabs thing is really annoying
@enderland I'm only on SO chat and I've got a separate browser open for it with all the tabs :)
I thought I was the only one :/
Lol :D
@davidism @Antti Haapala Thanks. Sry, I got confused, my problem is different. I have audio as well so I need multiple ports.
But I don't think I need a backend.
18:04
you're still confused
obvious guy says: "pro" is the opposite of "con". Therefore, if you are not confused, you are profused
haha
@davidism I have a noteapp application over a user can collaboratively write and send audio as well. Something like xournal.
also, by that logic, progress is the opposite of congress (then again, that just works by itself)
... isn't it?
I know threads in python but not async.io . Are there any advantages to using asynio over threads in socket programming?
18:09
pages socket expert
Coroutines are probably more efficient than threads for sockets at least in cpython.
because threads are inefficient in cpython
and coroutines are good for network io
18:13
Someone should take a look at this: stackoverflow.com/q/35994815/198633. OP needs to understand how to ask a question
18:30
answer dumping festival happening
guys :| frameworks are super annoying sometimes
OK guys, time to go home. Rhubarb, all
Rhubarb
rhubarb holden!
I did read the gcc documentation for -pedantic while writing this answer and I know what the -pedantic option does. I suggest you read the English language's documentation for "Pedantic". — QuestionC 6 mins ago
I really hate SO's C(++) community.
DSM
DSM
18:51
.. that's a lot of weight to hang on the name of a flag there, QC. It could have as easily been called "-enforce-strict-standards-compliance".
as opposed to the nice C++ communities out there?
I can imagine why people injuring their thumbs with blunt force trauma all the time would be crabby... after all, when your hammer is C++, everything looks like a thumb
this is checks if its list of strings. strings_in_list = np.array([type(x) is str for x in merge_columns]).all() How can I just check if merge_columns is a string?
That code is bad. Don't use type, don't use numpy just for all
DSM
DSM
@MahmutKilic: before anything else, that code is strange in several ways. You're constructing a numpy array for no reason, you're using type(x) is str, etc.
18:57
strings_in_list = all([type(x) is str for x in merge_columns])
this fill do same thing
all(isinstance(x, str) for x in mcs)
how would I find a specific word using regex?
and by that same logic, isinstance(mcs, str) to check if mcs is a string
@davidism I did saw something like that before, but never used, I will give a try
i tried pattern = re.compile(r'href="/b news /b(.*?)"') but it doesnt like it for some reason
18:58
@Gaddi you don't need regex for that. 'word' in data
Does "color game" mean something? I ran into a comment in some code that says "Find the black color game in the image". The code uses opencv to crop out black boxes in an image into new files. There was also a comment that said "load the games image". I'm confused about whether these are typos or something.
DSM
DSM
@davidism: well, that won't handle the wordbreaks correctly.
-pedantic actually doesn't enforce strict standards compliance. It just disables GCC extensions and prints warnings that GCC doesn't think are useful but the standard technically requires (aka, pedantic warnings).
@davidism so would ir just be re.compile('news')?
it wouldn't be a regex at all
it would literally be 'word' in data
don't use regex to parse html
19:00
so what would be the best way to sort sift through the href tags?
Use Beautiful Soup to work with HTML documents.
I remember getting into it with other programmers when I used variable length arrays (and vectors) so I could use the stack instead of the heap - and that was in 2001-2ish (and it still isn't fixed from what I know) - so I actually meant that as "C++ groups tend to be extra hostile as a general rule" (IME)
cheers ill give it a bash
DSM
DSM
@QuestionC: if you want to call it "stricter" rather than strict, you can, but you can't say "just disables extensions" and "technically requires" etc. Those are things people might be interested in (in particular, I've been bitten by writing gccisms in the past). They might not be useful to you, but most of your post is just saying "they used this word, which has this non-technical meaning, so I'm going to assume all implications of that word hold". That's not really very persuasive.
The option is be useful for a subset of C programmers, but that subset does not include "I started learning C for myself just for fun".
Technical terms do not always map to their English meanings, but in this case it does well enough, and any answer to the guy that doesn't amount to "No" is misleading him.
DSM
DSM
19:10
And an explanation of what it does, and why it's not particularly useful for beginners (although I'd argue it still might be), might potentially be helpful to someone starting off.. the dictionary stuff, not so much. Especially when I think your view is in the minority.
@QuestionC exactly
@QuestionC if you ignore -pedantic, you can expect that your code does not work on another C compiler for sure
19:23
:D
wrong room
stackoverflow.com/questions/35996522/… the suggestion in the comment is all that is needed. Cannot be re-produced
20:32
have you guys ever deleted an answer because OP just wouldn't get it, and you lost your patience, and just decided to drop the help-attempt?
@AnttiHaapala I'm still waiting for HugeCo to set up my new work computer. Til then, I have limited access to SO and the Internet in general.
I'm hoping their filter is as permissive as the old one...
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: wait, is HugeCo the company which stole the big client or the one from whom the big client was stolen?
@idjaw: rarely, but yes.
@idjaw I shout Garlic.
20:38
The one that stole the big client. I work for them as of nine hours ago.
thanks. Just trying to gauge my patience and determine how to proceed. At worst, I think I'll just let it be. The answer is what it is, and if OP doesn't get it, I can't stress myself over it.
done. decision made.
on an unrelated note
British Columbia is darn beautiful
idjaw - remember that your also answer the question for future visitors (I've had at least one of these types of answers get me upvotes later that, I assume, was due to it helping a new visitor rather than OP)
@Kevin working for microsfot
So if you think it will help others just feel good about that :)
I feel bad for Columbia - her presence in political cartoons has diminished ever since the Statue Of Liberty usurped her image.
20:40
@JGreenwell yep. very good point.
@idjaw also, from my time with coalition forces, you are completely correct - Canadian soldiers don't need guns - they need hockey sticks
@JGreenwell YES! :) hahah.
@AnttiHaapala Nope, they aren't Microsoft. And now, to maintain an air of mystery, I will respond to future guesses with "I can neither confirm nor deny..."
Rhubarb, Time to sleep
time for meetings. rbrb all
20:44
gnight @BhargavRao ... and to you too, @JGreenwell
@JonClements "the Grammy Award winning soundtrack album to the 1973 American film Jonathan Livingston Seagull..." I can't imagine how one would make a movie about a seagull. Unless you're Disney.
DSM
DSM
@Kevin: pineapples!
@JoranBeasley hehehhe
@DSM Thanks. I remain cautiously optimistic about this turn of events.
can't imagine how one would make a movie about seagull <- leave your camera on record and try having a barbeque on your beachside patio. Done
20:49
The "mine! mine!" seagulls from Finding Nemo pretty accurately represent the society that shuns J.L.S. in the first couple of chapters, but the rest of the book has a rather different tone
ok more dumb questions... does python not let you declare classes in other classes?
I'm pretty sure that's possible, although I don't think I've ever done it.
DSM
DSM
You can, although flat is better than nested(TM) so we usually don't.
Why are you trying to turn Python in to a monster? What did it do to you? :(
I needed to mock the requests return object, to do a test on it, and thought to declare the mockreturn right before the test... guess not ;)
20:54
I've seen it done before. The exact link to the example evades me
But namespaces are a great idea and we should do more of those, and putting stuff in classes is how you do namespaces... Isn't it?
How can you have a ClassManagerFactoryFactory without inner classes?
@enderland mocking, you say? :) Please do say more.
What are you trying to do exactly
Anyone of you ever had a 50 MB regex? :D stackoverflow.com/questions/35997758/…
:29334516 class RequestMockReturn():
    def __init__(self):
        self.status_code = 1
    pass

  @patch('requests.get')
    def test_check_health(self, r_mock):
        r_return = RequestMockReturn()
        r_mock.return_value = r_return

        with self.assertRaises(RuntimeError):
            self.dc.check_health()

        self.dc.healthcheck_link = '127.0.0.1'
        self.dc.check_health()

        self.assertEqual(r_mock.call_count, 1)
20:55
look at the responses library for requests-related mocking
it's good stuff
oh neat. I guess that would have been easier. though I'm doing something trivial (that is the extent of the mocking I need to do)
Can someone judge if the edit I proposed here is indeed valuable and if yes, take the honor of editing that in that answer? I have no background at all in Python and rather keep it that way.
@enderland tzaman has a great suggestion for mocking out request stuff. However, if you are doing something trivial, then why don't you just mock out the requests methods you are using instead?
Are you by any chance working in flask? Because if you are, there is the fantastic test client
user559633
@idjaw I did, but my method returns just the status_code from the http get response, so my mock return has to have something .status_code to use
err, if someone can delete my copy/paste up there that'd be great :)
20:58
> There is a principle in programming that you separate your input-reading code from the rest of the program logic.
Is this actually a principle outside of my head?
@enderland can you give me a pastebin of what you are trying to test?

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